English version :Hi Liquid yes just read that too. I have read many many articles about TALV in this publication and they always and I mean always put on a very negative spin. By the way the articles are written there must be some history here between the 2, I know there hasnt been anything very positive to mention however IMO if TALV were to turn every issue around, give 5000 people a new job and make fInland millions without a single enviromental issue they would still find something to say to put TALV down. You can probably tell I do not like YLE at all but yes iam biased.
like the way this has inched its way back nice and smoothly
like the way this has inched its way back nice and smotthly
SK79 morning, been in here for over 18 mths now and following like a hawk. agree with all your comments.. would sur elike to know what spiked the SP so dramatically though and with volumes on nasdaq through the roof in comparison. rumours maay be but i doubt it .. this is finland after all!
Eire27..for a minute wealth i though you were going to mention my market busting 12147 shs but well said anyhow, im with you here
just added a little now holding over 450k nurse nurse
Eire27... Eire27 beautiful wealth truley beautiful
pekka perra spotted at shanghai airport 'just kidding but more ore news 'A SURGE in the price of nickel, driven by ongoing concerns regarding the global supply of the metal, has pushed base metals on the London Metal Exchange to close higher. At the close of open-outcry trading in the British capital on Tuesday, LME 3-month nickel was up some 2.2 per cent at $18,325 per metric tonne. Earlier in the session, the metal hit $18,332 per tonne, its highest price for 14 months. "Used primarily in the stainless steel industry, this metal is currently being driven up by the conflict between Russia and Ukraine and associated concerns about supply outages," said analysts at Commerzbank. Nickel prices have surged by more than 30 per cent year-to-date, aided by global supply concerns amid an ongoing ore export ban in Indonesia and persistent tensions over Ukraine. Russia is a major supplier of nickel, and concerns have mounted about the potential for disruption to Russian supply in the event of any sanctions on commodities exports. Indonesia is a key supplier of ore to the Chinese nickel pig iron market. The enforcement of the export ban there, which started in January, has reduced China's port stocks and ore imports. Prices have risen in line with supply limitations. "The ore export ban in Indonesia is probably playing an even bigger role, however, with more and more market participants actually anticipating a supply deficit on the global nickel market before the year is out," it added.
Nickel climbed to a 14-month high in London on speculation supplies will be disrupted from Russia because of more discord in Ukraine. The Geneva agreement last week between Russia, the second biggest producer of the refined metal, and Ukraine is nearing collapse after clashes in the country's east at the weekend. Indonesia, the largest producer of the metal from mines, imposed an export ban in January. "Mounting tensions in Ukraine continued providing support for nickel," said Hwang Il Doo, a senior metals trader at Korea Exchange Bank Futures in Seoul. Nickel for delivery in three months rose 1.9% to $18 260 a metric tonne by 9.18am on the London Metal Exchange (LME), after earlier today climbing to $18 282, the highest since February 18 2013. The metal has risen 31% this year, the most among the six main metals traded on the LME. The nickel market will swing into a deficit this year for the first time since 2010 on Indonesia's ban, according to Toru Higo, the general manager of nickel sales and raw materials at Sumitomo Metal Mining Company. Copper in London fell 0.5% to $6 618 a tonne, dropping for the first time in three days. Futures for July delivery dropped 0.4% to $3.0155 a pound on the Comex in New York, after declining 0.2% on Monday when the LME was closed. In Shanghai, prices dropped 0.4%. In London, aluminum, lead and zinc climbed and tin was unchanged. – Bloomberg